What will I learn/study in this program?

As a student in the Fashion Studies program in KCAD’s Pamella Roland DeVos School of Fashion, you’ll engage in a broad and immersive study of fashion that explores traditional and emerging design and construction techniques, couture methods, sustainable practices, fashion illustration, product development, and the organization and execution of exhibition and runway events.

You’ll learn to transform two dimensional ideas into the three dimensional. At the same time, you’ll also be investigating the realities of the fashion industry through specialized courses in functional design, retail buying, and fashion show production. Your senior year offers options: complete your final year at KCAD, developing and publicly presenting an original collection of garment designs through a senior capstone course and fashion show that will allow you to discover and express your own design identity, and travel to New York City to attend Fashion Week. Or, you can apply to spend your senior year studying at the Fashion Institute of Technology in NYC.

You’ll also round your education out with a wide range of general education and art history courses that will stimulate your curiosity, broaden your perspective, and inspire new creative expressions. KCAD’s flexible General Education Pathways model empowers you to direct your learning by exploring subjects you find most engaging and relevant.

What skills will I develop in this program?

As you progress through the Fashion Studies program, you’ll develop a heightened ability to conduct relevant research; identify trends in color, fabric, and silhouette; and apply design elements and principles to create work with a unique point of view that balances aesthetics and functionality. You’ll learn to express your design ideas on paper through fashion illustrations and engineered flats before ultimately bringing them to life through a synthesis of design, construction, fitting, pattern-making, and draping skills.

Your intensive classroom experiences will cultivate strong critical thinking, communication, and design skills, while collaborative projects will help you develop stronger ideas, processes, and people skills in real-world settings. You’ll also understand how to plan out and manage the logistics of a runway fashion event.

Why study Fashion Studies at KCAD?

The Fashion Studies program extends KCAD’s legacy of leadership in design education into the world of fashion. While earning a full four-year degree that will add strength to your résumé, you’ll receive a specialized design education with a well-rounded general education. This strong foundation ensures that you’re not left to “sink or swim” on your own; you’re set up to succeed.

With the versatile skill set and strong portfolio you’ll build at KCAD, you’ll be an excellent candidate to take advantage of the option to study away at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in New York City. The program’s unique curriculum structure allows you to spend the first three years in the program at KCAD before applying to FIT, where you’ll complete your final year if accepted. You’ll be immersed in the epicenter of American fashion, opening up a world of opportunity for you, exposing you to resources, cultural institutions, and environments that will help you realize your aspirations.

Spend your senior year at KCAD, and you’ll study couture and innovative methods, sustainable fashion, create your own capstone collection to be shown at the annual fashion show, and take a trip to Fashion Week.

At KCAD, you’ll not only develop strong design and communication skills; you’ll put them to the test through collaborative projects with community organizations, such as designing costumes for the Grand Rapids Ballet or working with Spectrum Health to develop special compression garments for children with neuromuscular diseases. Show off your styling skills while creating a digital portfolio of your brand as you step into your career in the exciting fashion industry.

Where can I expect this degree to take me professionally?

As a graduate of the Fashion Studies program, you’ll emerge with a dynamic skill set and a comprehensive knowledge of the fashion industry that will allow you to consider a career as a fashion designer, textile designer, costume designer, construction specialist, visual merchandiser, stylist, buyer, technical designer, trend researcher, pattern maker, product developer, fashion writer, or creative director, among many other opportunities.

As a student in this program, what tools/technologies/support systems will I have access to?

As a student in the Fashion Studies program, you’ll have access to faculty who have worked in the industry, well-appointed classroom spaces featuring industry machines, cutting tools, and large work surfaces. You’ll also be able to leverage KCAD’s Material ConneXion Library, which offers direct access to more than 1,000 physical samples of advanced, innovative, and sustainable materials as well as online access to over 7,000 more; and The Dow Center FlexLab, KCAD’s state-of-the-art digital fabrication facility featuring 3D printers and scanners, laser cutting and vinyl cutting machines, wide format printers, and more.

You’ll also benefit from access to industry interactions, guest speakers, design forums, and other events hosted by Design West Michigan, a KCAD organization that explores and advocates for design as an economic building block in the region.

What other KCAD programs might I be interested in learning more about?

The process of drawing as observation and conceptualization through eye-hand coordination. Emphasizes linear construction with concern for accurate proportion and simple positive-negative/figure-ground relationships. Includes an in-depth study of linear perspective. (Students who have earned FSU credit for VISC 112 Drawing I, may not use credit earned in KCDR 131 to meet graduation requirements.

Emphasis on development of convincing illusion of three-dimensional objects, through the combined use of line, value, proportion, and composition. This course focuses on the further refinement of the concepts, processes, and techniques introduced in Drawing I. Expanded exploration of perspective, composition, color investigation, media exploration, and idea development within traditional subject matter will be emphasized.

To explore the elements, principles and aesthetic concepts integral to three-dimensional design and to consider relationships between concept, process, materials, tools and technical skills. (Students who have earned credit for ARTS 120, 3-D Design, may not use credit earned in KCSF 11 to meet graduation requirements.)

An introduction to the computer as a design tool using the industry standards in page layout and digital illustration, and photo manipulation software, the Adobe Creative Suite. File transport (PDF) and font management software will also be introduced.

Students will be exposed to the full range of design disciplines, their history of development, how they interact, differ, converge and lead to change in accommodating new needs. Students will explore design principles and processes, including product innovation and development, sustainability, form and function, and discover how design is an asset to the economy and works with business.

Students will study the illustration of contemporary fashions, designs and accessories as well as research the work of fashion illustrators. Course work will include practical techniques, flat development and fashion illustration along with experimentation with various media.

This course is designed to take an intensive look at all textile and material applications for apparel and accessories. It will focus on the visual, tactile manufacturing and performance aspects of each textile for consideration in product end use.

This course integrates design and construction skills placing a special focus on functional design problems. Emphasis will be placed on the application of fabric and construction for garments used in action or with specific performance needs.

This course integrates design and construction skills placing a special focus on sustainability in garment production. Emphasis will be placed on the application of fabric and construction for garments utilizing reduce, reuse, recycle principles in creating an environmentally-friendly apparel line.

This course integrates design and construction skills placing a special focus on innovative techniques in apparel design. Emphasis will be placed on specialized fabric applications and construction for garments utilizing technology.

This course is an introduction to retail buying and its opportunities for the purposes of career planning and preparation. It includes an understanding of the retail industry structure, decision making for retail and the development and implementation of promotional strategies and sales forecasting.

This is a capstone course that explores the responsibilities, ethics and evaluation of a professional in fashion studies. It includes resource identification, information retrieval, development of professional representation and communication with established industry professionals to create a resource network.

This course integrates design and construction skills placing a special focus on sustainability in garment production. Emphasis will be placed on the application of fabric and contruction for garments utilizing reduce, reuse and recycle principles in creating a sustainable apparel line.

An overview of the Western Art tradition from prehistory through the Renaissance using a socio-cultural methodology in a chronological framework. (Students who have earned credit for ARTH 110, Prehistoric through Middle Ages, may not use credit earned in KCAH 111 to meet graduation requirements.)

A survey of Western art from the Baroque to the present, this course will continue building upon the foundation of Western Art I; Prehistoric through the Renaissance, using a socio-cultural methodology in a chronological framework. (Students who have earned credit for ARTH 111, Renaissance through 20th Century, may not use credit earned in KCAH 112 to meet graduation requirements.)

This course focuses on using writing to develop ideas, hone critical thinking skills, and express ideas clearly and appropriately according to audience and purpose. Students write in a variety of modes and spend a portion of the semester engaging in scholarly research. Students also develop their public speaking skills.

This course provides a core understanding of effective storytelling. It examines the ways in which storytellers-both past and present-craft, organize, and convey ideas to successfully impact audiences, doing so through both inquiry into established narratives, as well as students' own experiments with narrative forms.

This course examines what it means to be a member of a particular society and how individuals both form and are formed by society. It will provide students with a better understanding of the social and cultural worlds they inhabit.

This course is an inquiry into the nature and power of philosophy to transform the way we experience the world around us and understand our place within it. Through a selection of readings representing various philosophical traditions and perspectives, critical discussion, and writing, students will examine some of the great questions that have intrigues philosophers from antiquity to present.

Students will continue development of their fashion illustration skills. Coursework will include development of a unique set of figures and continue exploration with various media to create comprehensive and cohesive collections.

Lori Faulkner

Kelly Muschiana

Adjunct Faculty

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Stephanie Wood

Adjunct Faculty

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As a graduate of the Pamella Roland DeVos School of Fashion, your comprehensive knowledge of the fashion industry will enable you to consider a wide range of careers spanning design, research, marketing, product development, media, and retail.